Top iOS6 Problems And How To Fix Them

Have you bought an iPhone 5 or upgraded your iPhone 4 or 4S or iPad to iOS 6? Many users have experienced problems with the new operating system version. We went through Apple's community discussions forum looking for common problems and solutions that users have found. Here are some of the most common having to do with Wi-Fi failures, missing music, failure to connect to iTunes, high cellular bills and, of course, the infamous Apple Maps.

Apple iOS6 comes with more than 200 new features over 5.1.1. including local search available for Siri, VIP mailboxes, and a global Do Not Disturb. But the upgrade also created problems for customers who don't expect problems to come from an Apple device. I went to the Apple Discussions Forum to find the most common and frustrating problems for users who upgraded to iOS6 and found some surprising solutions.

Big Disclaimer: I am not recommending any of these fixes and you should perform them at your own risk. Like any DIY project, research as much as possible and lean on the side of caution.

WiFi Toggle Grayed Out

Many customers complained of WiFi simply not working after they upgraded their iPhone 4 and 4s to iOS6. Without WiFi disabled, your monthly data limit will be burned up faster than you can say, 'Airplane Mode.'

Then this evening I tethered my iPhone to an iPad via Bluetooth. After browsing on the iPad a few minutes, I disconnected the Bluetooth pairing and powered off my iPhone. An hour later I turned it back on, and there it was, the WiFi toggle: available.

So you touch "Substitute" by The Clash, iOS zips through a bunch of songs and then out comes "The Ballad of John and Yoko." We know it ain't easy folks; we know how hard it can be. There are many Music-related bug reports in the forum, but we picked this one because a lot of users reported it and we've seen it ourselves.

Note that many users on the thread conflate the issue with use of the iTunes Match, which syncs your music across different devices, but the problem can happen without Match enabled.

Many users on the thread report various tricks which worked for them. Many use 3rd party tools to delete music on the iPhone from a Mac. But none seem to work generally.

Except one, and it's a drastic measure.

First, make sure you have a current backup of your device, and you want to do this docked to iTunes on a computer. Then, on iOS 6, go to Settings-General-Reset and choose "Erase all Content and Settings". You'll get a couple warnings about what you're doing, but keep going. This wipes your device back to factory default.

When you reboot it will enter the out-of-box setup procedure after which it will tell you to cable up to your computer to restore your backup. Follow the prompts. Your device will turn off at one point and you'll have to turn it back on and the restore will continue. Depending on how much content you have, the restore could take many hours.

But in the end, you'll have all your content back and the missing-music-bug will be fixed -- at least according to many users on this forum.

Cannot Connect to the iTunes Store

Many users in the Apple forum have written that after upgrading via WiFi they cannot connect to the iTunes Store.

There was an issue with Passbook causing the App Store to crash. The solution I found was to change your date in the settings to today's date, only in 2013. After changing, go back and try to open the App Store again. If it fails again (which mine did) go to settings and change your date back to today. It worked after that. I don't know why, but it did.

Here is Apple's solution for a failure to connect to the iTunes Store.

Make sure that you can access the Internet on your computer or device.

Make sure that your computer meets the iTunes minimum system requirements.

Make sure that your operating system is up-to-date:

For Mac OS X: Choose Software Update from the Apple menu to determine if you need to update your computer.

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